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Broccoli haircut

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hairstyle
The broccoli haircut features short sides and a curly top. A 2024 photo of actorDavid Corenswet on the set of the 2025 filmSuperman went viral due to him sporting the haircut.

Abroccoli haircut (also known as aZoomer perm and in the UK as themeet me at McDonald's haircut[1]) is a type ofhaircut with tapered sides and layered curls on top, usually achieved with aperm. It became popular among teenage and tween boys in the 2020s, particularly due to its spread onTikTok, and became anInternet meme around the same time.

Definition

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The broccoli haircut gets its name from its resemblance to a floret ofbroccoli

The broccoli haircut is a hairstyle withtapered sides and short, uneven layered curls on top, which are oftenpermed.[2] It is referred to as such due to its resemblance to a floret ofbroccoli. It has also been referred to as the "Zoomer perm" for its popularity among members ofGeneration Z, as well as "bird's nest hair",[3][4] "bussin haircut"[3] or "alpaca hair".[5] It has been described as a variation on abowl cut.[2][6]

History

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Permed broccoli haircuts worn bySoft Cell in 1983.

1980s

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The precursor to the modern broccoli haircut first appeared around 1982 among fans ofnew wave music groups such asSoft Cell,Talking Heads,A Flock of Seagulls,Duran Duran, andWham! It was a grown-out, unstyled version of thequiff[7] popular in theearly 80s that was frequentlypermed ormade to look big withhair spray. A similar haircut known as thepunch perm was popular among bikers in Japan and pop singers in Korea[8] throughout the 80s and 90s.[9]

2010s

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During the early and mid 2010s, the permed undercuts of the 80s and 90s underwent a revival.[10] The trend was inspired by hairstyles popular during theNew Romantic movement of the 1980s, such asmullets andshags.[4] By 2018, the hairstyle had gained recognition in the UK as the "Meet me atMcDonald's haircut".[1] The hairstyle achieved media exposure after a school inGreat Yarmouth, Norfolk banned pupils from possessing the style.[11][12]

2020s

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During theCOVID-19 lockdowns of the early 2020s, many youngerGen Z men in the UK and America experimented with new hairstyles at home before thebarbers reopened. In 2020, Dillon Latham, a then-15-year-old TikToker, posted a clip of himself getting a perm in the style of the broccoli haircut, which prompted its early spread among teenage and tween boys. It soon became more a trend in 2021 after being worn by TikTokers such asNoah Beck,Bryce Hall,Harry Jowsey, andJack Doherty.[3][2] That same year, it became anInternet meme and a subject of scorn online, beginning with a4chan thread that coined the phrase "Zoomer perm" to describe it.[13] The haircut also became unfavorably associated with stereotypical "fuck boys" and "gym bros".[14]

The broccoli haircut was especially popular by 2022 and gained further attention online in 2024 when a photo of American actorDavid Corenswet on the set ofJames Gunn's 2025 filmSuperman showed him with what many online described as a broccoli haircut, which was mocked by social media users.[4]GQ's Alex Nino Gheciu argued that the broccoli haircut had reached its peak by 2024.[3] Also in 2024,Marie Claire's Samantha Holender called the haircut "the TikTok tween boy hallmark".[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abGill, Emma (26 February 2018)."A haircut doesn't stop you doing school work - what you are saying about the 'Meet me at McDonald's' style".Manchester Evening News. Archived fromthe original on 29 January 2022.
  2. ^abcdHolender, Samantha (June 20, 2024)."So We're Taking Haircut Inspiration From Broccoli Now".Marie Claire. RetrievedAugust 10, 2024.
  3. ^abcdNino Gheciu, Alex (July 11, 2024)."How the Broccoli Perm Became the Definitive Zoomer Hairstyle".GQ. RetrievedAugust 10, 2024.
  4. ^abcPatrick, Lydia (August 9, 2024)."What exactly is the broccoli haircut that teen boys love?".Newsweek. RetrievedAugust 10, 2024.
  5. ^"The 'alpaca' haircut teenage boys and young men are obsessed with — explained".NPR. 23 September 2024.
  6. ^Baker, Ariel (April 5, 2024)."The 'Broccoli Haircut' Is Taking Over Social Media".PopSugar. RetrievedAugust 10, 2024.
  7. ^Colville, Charlie (2024-09-09)."Is The Broccoli Cut The Most Divisive Men's Hair Trend Of 2024?".Country and Town House. Retrieved2025-04-26.
  8. ^Saltzman, Steph (2022-04-07)."The 'Broccoli Cut' and 8 Other Gen Z Hair Trends, Explained".Fashionista. Retrieved2025-04-26.
  9. ^Fejtek, Melissa (2023-08-17)."Hair Perm Comeback: How TikTok and K-Pop Are Influencing the Trend - FASHION Magazine".fashionmagazine.com. Archived fromthe original on 2023-08-17. Retrieved2025-04-26.
  10. ^Gen Z haircut
  11. ^Petter, Olivia (22 February 2018)."'Meet me at McDonald's' haircut banned in Norfolk school".The Independent. Retrieved24 September 2024.
  12. ^Senkul, Ceren (22 February 2018)."Not lovin' it: School's beef with 'meet me at McDonald's' haircut".Sky News. Retrieved24 September 2024.
  13. ^Encinas, Amaris (August 9, 2024)."Broccoli hair is here to stay: Why teenage boys are serving floret looks".USA Today. RetrievedAugust 10, 2024.
  14. ^Martichoux, Alix (August 10, 2024)."Teen boys all seem to want a 'broccoli' haircut. What is it?".Nexstar. RetrievedAugust 10, 2024 – viaKXAN.
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